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Ilocos Sur

Ilocos Sur, officially the Province of Ilocos Sur (Ilocano: Probinsia ti Ilocos Sur; Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Ilocos Sur), is a province in the Philippines located in the Ilocos Region in Luzon. Located on the mouth of the Mestizo River is the capital of Vigan. Ilocos Sur is bordered by Ilocos Norte and Abra to the north, Mountain Province to the east, La Union and Benguet to the south and the South China Sea to the west.

Ilocos Sur
Province of Ilocos Sur
Location in the Philippines
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 17°20′N 120°35′E / 17.33°N 120.58°E / 17.33; 120.58Coordinates: 17°20′N 120°35′E / 17.33°N 120.58°E / 17.33; 120.58
CountryPhilippines
RegionIlocos Region
FoundedJune 13, 1572
CapitalVigan
Largest cityCandon
Government
 • GovernorJeremias C. Singson (NPC/Bileg)
 • Vice GovernorRyan Luis V. Singson (Lakas/Bileg)
 • LegislatureIlocos Sur Provincial Board
Area
 • Total2,596.00 km2 (1,002.32 sq mi)
 • Rank51st out of 81
Highest elevation
[2] (Mount Camingingel)
2,371 m (7,779 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [3]
 • Total706,009
 • Rank43rd out of 81
 • Density270/km2 (700/sq mi)
  • Rank33rd out of 81
Divisions
 • Independent cities0
 • Component cities
 • Municipalities
 • Barangays768
 • DistrictsLegislative districts of Ilocos Sur
Time zoneUTC+8 (PST)
ZIP code
2700–2733
IDD:area codePH-ILS
Spoken languages
HDI 0.70 (High)[4]
HDI rank19th (2019)
Websitewww.ilocossur.gov.ph

Ilocos Sur was founded by the Spanish conquistador Juan de Salcedo in 1572. It was formed when the north (now Ilocos Norte) split from the south (Ilocos Sur). At that time it included parts of Abra and the upper half of present-day La Unión. The current boundary of the province was permanently defined through Act 2683 signed in March 1917.

The province is home to two UNESCO World Heritage Sites, namely, the Heritage City of Vigan and the Baroque Church of Santa Maria.

History

Before the arrival of the Spaniards, the coastal plains in northwestern Luzón, from Bangui in the north to Namacpacan in the south, were a region called the Ylokos. This region lies in between the China Sea in the west and Northern Cordilleras in the east. The inhabitants built their villages near the small bays on coves called looc in the local dialect. These coastal inhabitants were referred to as Ylocos which literally meant from the lowlands. The entire region was then called by the ancient name Samtoy from sao mi ditoy which in Ilocano translates to our language. The region was later called Ylocos or Ilocos by the Spaniards and its people Ilocanos.

The Ilocos Region was already a thriving and fairly advanced cluster of towns and settlements familiar to Chinese, Japanese and Malay traders when the Spaniard explorer Don Juan de Salcedo arrived in Vigan on June 13, 1572. The Spanish made Cabigbigaan their headquarters which Salcedo called Villa Fernandina and which eventually gained fame as the Intramuros de Ilocandia. Salcedo declared all of Northern Luzón an encomienda or land grant. Subsequently he became the encomendero of Vigan and Lieutenant Governor of Ylokos until his death in July 1574.

Augustinian missionaries came to colonize the region through evangelization. They established parishes and built churches that still stand today.[5] Three centuries later, Vigan became the seat of the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia.

A royal decree on February 2, 1818 separated Ilocos Norte from Ilocos Sur, the latter to include the northern part of La Unión (as far as Namacpacan, now Luna) and all of what is now the province of Abra. The sub-province of Lepanto and Amburayan in Mountain Province were annexed by Ilocos Sur.

The passage of Act 2683 by the Philippine Legislature in March 1917 defined the present geographical boundary of the province.

Precolonial era

In antiquity, Ylocos was known as the land of Samtoy.[6]

The northwestern part of Luzon is home to the Ilocanos of the Malay. According to the chronicles of Fray Andrés Carro, the word Samtoy was applied to ancient Ylokos where the dialect was spoken. The ancient land of Ylokos extended from Bangui in the north to Aringay in the south. Ylokos is situated between the coast of the South China Sea and the rugged mountain ranges of the Cordillera on a long narrow strip of coastal plain. On the western side, the land is sandy. On the eastern side, near the slopes of the mountains that separates the region from the Mountain Province, the land is rocky, leaving just a narrow strip of plain for cultivation. The mountains come so close to the sea that the public highway must be carved into the mountains. The pressure of increasing population and consequent need for land has made the people of this region thrifty.

Spanish exploration

The coast of Samtoy, already familiar to Chinese and Japanese traders before Magellan's time, was known to the Spanish colonizers in 1572 when Juan de Salcedo traveled along Samtoy or what is now known as the Ilocos Provinces. Sent by Miguel López de Legazpi to explore the whole island of Luzón, Salcedo founded Ciudad Fernandina in 1574 in Bigan in what is now Ilocos Sur. It became the center of Spanish rule and influence including the evangelization and pacification movements.

After Salcedo's exploration, the Spaniards created Samtoy into an encomienda with Villa Fernandina as the capital in Tamag.

Salcedo was lieutenant governor of Ylokos and the encomendero of Bigan when he died on March 11, 1576. Due to his efforts, the settlements in Tagurín, Santa Lucía, Nalbacán, Bantay, Candón and Sinayt were pacified and made to pay tribute to the King of Spain.

Conversion of the natives

To implement Spain's policy, missionaries were sent to convert the natives to Christianity. A Spanish chronicler[who?] wrote: "The Ilocos are all Christians and are the humblest and most tractable".

The evangelization of Ilocos Sur was carried out by the Augustinians who established parishes in Santa in 1576, Tagurín in 1586, Santa Lucía in 1586, Nalbacán in 1587, Candón 1591, and Bantay in 1590. In 1641, they built a church in Bigan which 117 years later was to become the cathedral of the Episcopal See of Nueva Segovia.

Partition of Ylokos

Ylokos comprised the present provinces of Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Abra and a part of Mountain Province.

A royal decree dated February 2, 1818 separated the northern section of Ylokos which became the province of Ilocos Norte. The southern portion, called Ilocos Sur, included the northern part of La Union and all of what is now the province of Abra. In 1854 the province of La Unión was created out of the towns that had belonged to Ilocos Sur and Pangasinan. Ilocos Sur previously extended as far south as Namacpacan (in Luna) with the territory south of this belonging to Pangasinan. Portions of Ilocos Sur in Amburayan were taken from the Mountain Province and incorporated into Ilocos Sur.[clarification needed]

Abra, which was part of Ilocos Sur, was created in 1864 with Lepanto as a sub-province to Ilocos Sur and remained as such until March 1971 when the passage of Act made it again a separate province.[clarification needed]

Vigan, capital of Ylocos

Vigan is almost four centuries old and was once known as Kabigbigaan from biga, a coarse erect and araceous plant with large and ornate leaves that grows on river banks. Bigan was later changed to Vigan. To the Spaniards it was Villa Fernandina in honor of King Ferdinand.

Vigan was founded in 1574 by Spanish conquistador Juan de Salcedo as the capital of Ylocos. Before Salcedo arrived in Bigan, the town was the center of Malayan civilization with a population of 8,000, greater than that of Manila at the time. It was already enjoying some prosperity, trading with the Chinese and Japanese who brought fine jars, silk and crockery through the nearby port of Pandan, Caoayan.

In the 19th century, Vigan traded with Europe. Ships loaded with indigo went to textile mills on the Continent. The invention of chemical dyes in Germany ruined this industry. Affluent citizens of Vigan stocked their homes with statuettes of brass and iron, dinner wares and other artifacts of European civilization, including fine ivory, inlaid furniture and China wares.[citation needed]

Social institutions

Before Salcedo died in 1576, be bequeathed his encomienda to a select group who continued the tenancy system which developed into the practice of caciquism, landlordism and consequently, usury. The aristocracy of the babaknangs against whom the kaillanes rose in revolt in 1762 is apparent. The two sections of the town — one for the meztizos and the other for the naturales are still distinct. These practices became prominent during the indigo boom at the middle of the 19th century. Caciquism, together with landlordism and usury, was the greatest obstacle to the progress of the province.

Migration

The Spanish colonizers utilized free labor in the development of Ilocos Sur. Resentment of free labor brought about sporadic revolts and those who refused to be slaves or tenants left the region and went to Abra and the Cagayan Valley. From 1898 to the first decade of the 20th century, covered ox carts moved to the rich plains of Pangasinan, Nueva Ecija and Tarlac. In these travels, the children were told tales of Lam-ang, Angalo, Aran, Juan Sadot and other legendary Ilocano characters. Folk songs like Pamulinawen, Manang Biday, Dungdungwen Kanto Unay, Unay and the Iloko dal-lot were popularized.

The second phase of Ilocano migration was from 1908 to 1946 when surplus labor migrated to the plantations of Hawaii and the American West Coast. At the height of migration, the population density of Ilocos Sur was 492 inhabitants per square mile, which made it the most dense region in the Philippines, excluding Manila. The last group of labor migration to Hawaii was in 1946 when 7,365 men were recruited by the U.S. Department of Labor. Vigan was the recruiting center. More than seventy percent of the 63,500 Filipinos in Hawaii are of Ilocano origin.[citation needed]

Economic prosperity

The first half of the 19th century was an economic boom for Ilocos Sur. It was during this period when the cotton, tobacco and indigo industries were encouraged by the government. With the operations of the Royal Company of the Philippines (Real Compañía de Filipinas), the textile industry was developed on a large scale and the abolition of the tobacco monopoly accelerated economic progress. The invention of chemical dyes put the indigo industry out of business.

Uneasy peace

The history of Ilocos Sur from the beginning of the Spanish rule to the first decade of the nineteenth century was characterized by revolts against tributes and forced labor as well as monopolies.

The most famous uprising was the Ilocos revolt (1762–1763) better known as Silang's Revolt. This was principally an uprising aimed at the Babaknangs and the alcalde-mayor of Vigan. After Diego Silang's assassination on May 28, 1763, his wife Maria Josefa Gabriela continued the fight until she was captured and hanged publicly on September 20, 1763.

The government's monopoly on basi, the native wine, occurred on September 16, 1817. Under the command of Ambaristo, the rebels were defeated by a contingent of regular troops and recruits.

On March 25, 1898, Isabelo Abaya fomented an uprising in Candón and raised a red flag in the town plaza. The historic Ikkis ti Candon was the start of several revolutions in the Ilocos Region.[further explanation needed]

Philippine Revolution and Philippine-American War

Ilocos Sur, like other provinces in the Philippines, was quick to rally behind Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo in the Philippine Revolution of 1896. Upon Vigan's capture, the rebels made Bishop's Palace their headquarters. On March 21, 1898, Don Mariano Acosta of Candón established the provincial revolutionary government. When General Aguinaldo returned from exile in Hong Kong, he sent General Manuel Tinio to implement guerilla warfare on the Americans. Vigan served as Tinio's headquarters until its occupation by the U.S. 45th Infantry Division under Lt. Col. James Parker on December 4, 1899. General Gregorio del Pilar died a heroic death on December 2, 1899 at the Tirad Pass in Concepción in a battle against the American Forces under Major C. March.

Under the Americans, a civil government was established in Ilocos Sur on September 1, 1901. Don Mena Crisólogo, a delegate to the Malolos Congress, was the first provincial governor.

World War II

On December 10, 1941, a contingent of Japanese Imperial forces landed in Mindoro, Vigan, Santa, Pandan and Caoayan.

In Cervantes, the Battle of Bessang Pass was fought between General Yamashita's forces and the U.S. 21st Infantry. On April 18, 1945 Ilocos Sur was liberated from the Japanese by the joint efforts of Ilocano guerrillas and American soldiers.[further explanation needed]

Contemporary history

The 1970s were a dark period for the province as armed men known as the saka-saka (Ilocano literally "bare-footed") terrorized the province. This reign of terror resulted in the famous burning of the barangays of Ora East and Ora Centro in Bantay. The era ended with the election of Luis "Chavit" Singson as governor.[citation needed]

Geography

 
Coastline of Vigan

Ilocos Sur occupies the central section of the Ilocos Region in northern Luzon. It is bordered by Ilocos Norte to the north, Abra to the northeast, Mountain Province to the east, Benguet to the southeast, La Union to the south, and the South China Sea to the west. Its area of 2,596.00 square kilometres (1,002.32 sq mi)[7] occupies about 20% of the total land area of Region 1. The topography of Ilocos Sur ranges from 10 to 1,700 metres (33 to 5,577 ft) above sea level.

Climate

The climate is generally dry as defined by the Hernandez climate classification—the dry months are from October to May. The southernmost portion in Cervantes is wet with rain evenly distributed throughout the year while the southeastern part of Sugpon receives less precipitation. The rainy season arrives in August while January and February have the lowest precipitation. The mean temperature in the province is 27 °C (81 °F). January is the coldest.[vague]

Administrative divisions

Ilocos Sur comprises 32 municipalities and 2 component cities, which are organized into two legislative districts.[7] There are a total of 768 barangays in the province. [3]

 
Political map of Ilocos Sur
  •  †  Provincial capital and component city
  •  ∗  Component city
  •   Municipality

Barangays

The 32 municipalities and 2 cities of the province comprise a total of 768 barangays, with Puro in Magsingal as the most populous in 2010, and Montero in Banayoyo as the least. [9]

Demographics

Population census of Ilocos Sur
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 189,572—    
1918 247,458+1.79%
1939 271,532+0.44%
1948 276,278+0.19%
1960 338,058+1.70%
1970 385,139+1.31%
1975 419,776+1.74%
1980 443,591+1.11%
1990 519,966+1.60%
1995 545,385+0.90%
2000 594,206+1.85%
2007 633,138+0.88%
2010 658,587+1.44%
2015 689,668+0.88%
2020 706,009+0.46%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority [8][9][9][10]

According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 706,009 people, [3] with a density of 270 inhabitants per square kilometre or 700 inhabitants per square mile.

The 1960 census lists 338,058 people; 64,446 dwelling units of which 2,974 are lighted with electricity; 3227 provided with radio; 7379 served with pipe water; 25,137 served with artesian and pumped water; and 310 using electricity, kerosene and gas for cooking.[citation needed]

Inhabitants

Ilocos Sur is inhabited mostly by Ilocanos belonging to the third largest ethnic group of Austronesian origin. A Spanish chronicler[who?] wrote that “the people are very simple, domestic and peaceful, large of body and very strong. “They are highly civilized. They are a most clean race, especially the women in their homes which they keep very neat and clean.”[citation needed]

Miguel de Loarca records around 1582 that the Ilocanos are intelligent as the Zambaleños for they are farmers. The main occupation of the people is agriculture.[citation needed]

Father Juan de Medina noted in 1630 that the natives are ‘the humblest and most tractable known and lived in nest and large settlements'.[citation needed]

Religion

The province is predominantly Roman Catholic with 75% of population adherence. Aglipayan Church is also a considerable large minority with a 20% adherence.[citation needed] Other religious beliefs are represented by other Christian Churches such as Baptist, Iglesia ni Cristo, Methodist, Seventh-day Adventist, other Evangelical Christians as well as Muslims.

Economy

 
Sinait Public Market

Products and industries

The people are engaged in farming, producing food crops, mostly rice, corn, vegetable, root crops, and fruits. Non-food crops include tobacco, cotton, and tigergrass. Cottage industries include loom weaving, furniture making, jewelry making, ceramics, blacksmithing, and food processing.

Agriculture

 
Rice grains being dried on a road in San Esteban.

Ilocos Sur's economy is agrarian, but its 2,647 square kilometres (1,022 sq mi) of unfertile land is not enough to support a population of 338,579.[citation needed]

Agricultural crops such as rice, corn tobacco and fruit trees dominate their farm industries. Secondary crops are camote and cassava, sugar cane and onions.

The rapidly growing population, the decreasing fertility of the soil, and the long period between the planting and harvesting season, have forced the people to turn to manufacture and trade. Many Ilocanos go to the Cagayán valley, Central Plains and Mindanao to sell Ilocano woven cloth.

Virginia leaf tobacco is still a premier cash crop, after a windfall brought about by the Tobacco Subsidy Law authored by Congressman Floro Crisólogo in 1964,[18] and later enhanced by the Republic Act No. 7171 authored by Congressman Singson.[19]

Weaving is the most extensive handicraft, once bolstered by the installation of the NDC Textile Mills in Narvacan which supplied the weavers with yarn.

Other industries are burnay and slipper making in Vigan, furniture, cabinet, and statue making in San Vicente, mortar and pestle making in San Esteban, and bolo making in Santa.

Infrastructure

Electricity

 

Education

Ilocos Sur has 547 public schools including five general high schools, one university, one agricultural college and 56 private schools, 16 of which are Catholic.[citation needed]

Culture

The Ilocos Sur Museum, founded on August 22, 1970, has a collection of cultural treasures which include art include paintings, centuries-old sculptures, pieces of carved furniture, and relics of Spanish European and Chinese cultures that had influenced Ilocano life for centuries.

Chapters of Philippine history and religion are found in the Crisólogo collections which includes family heirlooms, centuries –old "santos" (religious statuettes made of wood or ivory)[clarification needed], other ivory images, Vienna furniture, marble-topped tables, ancient-carved beds, rare Chinese porcelains, jars and jarlettes, lamps, Muslim brass wares, and Spanish and Mexican coins.

The Syquia collections, including then President Elpidio Quirino's memorabilia, vie in quality with the Crisólogo collections. But in the midst of a fire scare in Vigan in the late 1908s and 1990s, the relics in the Syquia Mansion were transferred to Manila for safekeeping.

UNESCO Recognitions in Ilocos Sur

UNESCO has inscribed two Ilocos Sur sites in the World Heritage List.

Heritage City of Vigan

In 1999, the Heritage City of Vigan was inscribed in the World Heritage List. UNESCO describes the site as:

"Established in the 16th century, Vigan is the best-preserved example of a planned Spanish colonial town in Asia. Its architecture reflects the coming together of cultural elements from elsewhere in the Philippines, from China and from Europe, resulting in a culture and townscape that have no parallel anywhere in East and South-East Asia."[20]

Santa Maria Church

In 1993, the Baroque Churches of the Philippines, containing 4 properties, was inscribed in the World Heritage List. One of the properties was the Santa Maria Church of Ilocos Sur. UNESCO describes, "[the] unique architectural style [of the churches] is a reinterpretation of European Baroque by Chinese and Philippine craftsmen."[21]

Notable people from Ilocos Sur

References

  1. ^ . PSGC Interactive. Makati City, Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Archived from the original on January 11, 2013. Retrieved September 19, 2013.
  2. ^ "Mount Camingingel". PeakVisor. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d Census of Population (2020). "Region I (Ilocos Region)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved July 8, 2021.
  4. ^ . Philippine Statistics Authority. Archived from the original on June 17, 2020. Retrieved January 12, 2021.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
  7. ^ a b c d "Province: Ilocos Sur". PSGC Interactive. Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Census of Population (2015). "Region I (Ilocos Region)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  9. ^ a b c Census of Population and Housing (2010). "Region I (Ilocos Region)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. NSO. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  10. ^ "Philippines Census Of Population of all LGUs 1903-2007". archive.org. Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  11. ^ "Poverty incidence (PI):". Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  12. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/NSCB_LocalPovertyPhilippines_0.pdf; publication date: 29 November 2005; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  13. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/2009%20Poverty%20Statistics.pdf; publication date: 8 February 2011; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  14. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/Table%202.%20%20Annual%20Per%20Capita%20Poverty%20Threshold%2C%20Poverty%20Incidence%20and%20Magnitude%20of%20Poor%20Population%2C%20by%20Region%20and%20Province%20%20-%202006%2C%202009%2C%202012%20and%202015.xlsx; publication date: 27 August 2016; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  15. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/Table%202.%20%20Annual%20Per%20Capita%20Poverty%20Threshold%2C%20Poverty%20Incidence%20and%20Magnitude%20of%20Poor%20Population%2C%20by%20Region%20and%20Province%20%20-%202006%2C%202009%2C%202012%20and%202015.xlsx; publication date: 27 August 2016; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  16. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/Table%202.%20%20Annual%20Per%20Capita%20Poverty%20Threshold%2C%20Poverty%20Incidence%20and%20Magnitude%20of%20Poor%20Population%2C%20by%20Region%20and%20Province%20%20-%202006%2C%202009%2C%202012%20and%202015.xlsx; publication date: 27 August 2016; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  17. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/Table%202.%20%20Updated%20Annual%20Per%20Capita%20Poverty%20Threshold%2C%20Poverty%20Incidence%20and%20Magnitude%20of%20Poor%20Population%20with%20Measures%20of%20Precision%2C%20by%20Region%20and%20Province_2015%20and%202018.xlsx; publication date: 4 June 2020; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  18. ^ "Republic Act No. 4155". lawphil.net.
  19. ^ "Republic Act No. 7171 : REPUBLIC ACTS - PHILIPPINE LAWS STATUTES and CODES". laws.chanrobles.com.
  20. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Historic City of Vigan". UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
  21. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Baroque Churches of the Philippines". UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
  22. ^ Bragado, Erlinda (2002). ""Sukimátem": Isabelo de los Reyes Revisited" (PDF). Philippine Studies. 50 (1): 50–75. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  23. ^ Saulo, Alfredo (2002). Communism in the Philippines : An Introduction (Enlarged ed.). Manila, Philippines: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 9715504035. OCLC 969406494.

External links

Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
Download coordinates as: KML
  •   Media related to Ilocos Sur at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Geographic data related to Ilocos Sur at OpenStreetMap

ilocos, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, 2013, le. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ilocos Sur news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ilocos Sur officially the Province of Ilocos Sur Ilocano Probinsia ti Ilocos Sur Tagalog Lalawigan ng Ilocos Sur is a province in the Philippines located in the Ilocos Region in Luzon Located on the mouth of the Mestizo River is the capital of Vigan Ilocos Sur is bordered by Ilocos Norte and Abra to the north Mountain Province to the east La Union and Benguet to the south and the South China Sea to the west Ilocos SurProvinceProvince of Ilocos Sur from top left to right Mount Namindaraan San Vicente Church Ilocos Sur Provincial Capitol Vigan coast Vigan City and Road in Suyo FlagSealLocation in the PhilippinesOpenStreetMapCoordinates 17 20 N 120 35 E 17 33 N 120 58 E 17 33 120 58 Coordinates 17 20 N 120 35 E 17 33 N 120 58 E 17 33 120 58CountryPhilippinesRegionIlocos RegionFoundedJune 13 1572CapitalViganLargest cityCandonGovernment GovernorJeremias C Singson NPC Bileg Vice GovernorRyan Luis V Singson Lakas Bileg LegislatureIlocos Sur Provincial BoardArea 1 Total2 596 00 km2 1 002 32 sq mi Rank51st out of 81Highest elevation 2 Mount Camingingel 2 371 m 7 779 ft Population 2020 census 3 Total706 009 Rank43rd out of 81 Density270 km2 700 sq mi Rank33rd out of 81Divisions Independent cities0 Component cities2 CandonVigan Municipalities32 AlilemBanayoyoBantayBurgosCabugaoCaoayanCervantesGalimuyodGregorio del PilarLidliddaMagsingalNagbukelNarvacanQuirinoSalcedoSan EmilioSan EstebanSan IldefonsoSan JuanSan VicenteSantaSanta CatalinaSanta CruzSanta LuciaSanta MariaSantiagoSanto DomingoSigaySinaitSugponSuyoTagudin Barangays768 DistrictsLegislative districts of Ilocos SurTime zoneUTC 8 PST ZIP code2700 2733IDD area code PH ILSSpoken languagesIlocanoKankana eyFilipinoEnglishHDI0 70 High 4 HDI rank19th 2019 Websitewww wbr ilocossur wbr gov wbr phIlocos Sur was founded by the Spanish conquistador Juan de Salcedo in 1572 It was formed when the north now Ilocos Norte split from the south Ilocos Sur At that time it included parts of Abra and the upper half of present day La Union The current boundary of the province was permanently defined through Act 2683 signed in March 1917 The province is home to two UNESCO World Heritage Sites namely the Heritage City of Vigan and the Baroque Church of Santa Maria Contents 1 History 1 1 Precolonial era 1 2 Spanish exploration 1 2 1 Conversion of the natives 1 3 Partition of Ylokos 1 3 1 Vigan capital of Ylocos 1 3 2 Social institutions 1 3 3 Migration 1 4 Economic prosperity 1 5 Uneasy peace 1 6 Philippine Revolution and Philippine American War 1 7 World War II 1 8 Contemporary history 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 2 2 Administrative divisions 2 3 Barangays 3 Demographics 3 1 Inhabitants 3 2 Religion 4 Economy 4 1 Products and industries 4 2 Agriculture 5 Infrastructure 5 1 Electricity 6 Education 7 Culture 8 UNESCO Recognitions in Ilocos Sur 8 1 Heritage City of Vigan 8 2 Santa Maria Church 9 Notable people from Ilocos Sur 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditThis section may contain content that is repetitive or redundant of text elsewhere in the article Please help improve it by merging similar text or removing repeated statements April 2016 Before the arrival of the Spaniards the coastal plains in northwestern Luzon from Bangui in the north to Namacpacan in the south were a region called the Ylokos This region lies in between the China Sea in the west and Northern Cordilleras in the east The inhabitants built their villages near the small bays on coves called looc in the local dialect These coastal inhabitants were referred to as Ylocos which literally meant from the lowlands The entire region was then called by the ancient name Samtoy from sao mi ditoy which in Ilocano translates to our language The region was later called Ylocos or Ilocos by the Spaniards and its people Ilocanos The Ilocos Region was already a thriving and fairly advanced cluster of towns and settlements familiar to Chinese Japanese and Malay traders when the Spaniard explorer Don Juan de Salcedo arrived in Vigan on June 13 1572 The Spanish made Cabigbigaan their headquarters which Salcedo called Villa Fernandina and which eventually gained fame as the Intramuros de Ilocandia Salcedo declared all of Northern Luzon an encomienda or land grant Subsequently he became the encomendero of Vigan and Lieutenant Governor of Ylokos until his death in July 1574 Augustinian missionaries came to colonize the region through evangelization They established parishes and built churches that still stand today 5 Three centuries later Vigan became the seat of the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia A royal decree on February 2 1818 separated Ilocos Norte from Ilocos Sur the latter to include the northern part of La Union as far as Namacpacan now Luna and all of what is now the province of Abra The sub province of Lepanto and Amburayan in Mountain Province were annexed by Ilocos Sur The passage of Act 2683 by the Philippine Legislature in March 1917 defined the present geographical boundary of the province Precolonial era Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message In antiquity Ylocos was known as the land of Samtoy 6 The northwestern part of Luzon is home to the Ilocanos of the Malay According to the chronicles of Fray Andres Carro the word Samtoy was applied to ancient Ylokos where the dialect was spoken The ancient land of Ylokos extended from Bangui in the north to Aringay in the south Ylokos is situated between the coast of the South China Sea and the rugged mountain ranges of the Cordillera on a long narrow strip of coastal plain On the western side the land is sandy On the eastern side near the slopes of the mountains that separates the region from the Mountain Province the land is rocky leaving just a narrow strip of plain for cultivation The mountains come so close to the sea that the public highway must be carved into the mountains The pressure of increasing population and consequent need for land has made the people of this region thrifty Spanish exploration Edit The coast of Samtoy already familiar to Chinese and Japanese traders before Magellan s time was known to the Spanish colonizers in 1572 when Juan de Salcedo traveled along Samtoy or what is now known as the Ilocos Provinces Sent by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi to explore the whole island of Luzon Salcedo founded Ciudad Fernandina in 1574 in Bigan in what is now Ilocos Sur It became the center of Spanish rule and influence including the evangelization and pacification movements After Salcedo s exploration the Spaniards created Samtoy into an encomienda with Villa Fernandina as the capital in Tamag Salcedo was lieutenant governor of Ylokos and the encomendero of Bigan when he died on March 11 1576 Due to his efforts the settlements in Tagurin Santa Lucia Nalbacan Bantay Candon and Sinayt were pacified and made to pay tribute to the King of Spain Conversion of the natives Edit To implement Spain s policy missionaries were sent to convert the natives to Christianity A Spanish chronicler who wrote The Ilocos are all Christians and are the humblest and most tractable The evangelization of Ilocos Sur was carried out by the Augustinians who established parishes in Santa in 1576 Tagurin in 1586 Santa Lucia in 1586 Nalbacan in 1587 Candon 1591 and Bantay in 1590 In 1641 they built a church in Bigan which 117 years later was to become the cathedral of the Episcopal See of Nueva Segovia Partition of Ylokos Edit Ylokos comprised the present provinces of Ilocos Norte Ilocos Sur Abra and a part of Mountain Province A royal decree dated February 2 1818 separated the northern section of Ylokos which became the province of Ilocos Norte The southern portion called Ilocos Sur included the northern part of La Union and all of what is now the province of Abra In 1854 the province of La Union was created out of the towns that had belonged to Ilocos Sur and Pangasinan Ilocos Sur previously extended as far south as Namacpacan in Luna with the territory south of this belonging to Pangasinan Portions of Ilocos Sur in Amburayan were taken from the Mountain Province and incorporated into Ilocos Sur clarification needed Abra which was part of Ilocos Sur was created in 1864 with Lepanto as a sub province to Ilocos Sur and remained as such until March 1971 when the passage of Act made it again a separate province clarification needed Vigan capital of Ylocos Edit Vigan is almost four centuries old and was once known as Kabigbigaan from biga a coarse erect and araceous plant with large and ornate leaves that grows on river banks Bigan was later changed to Vigan To the Spaniards it was Villa Fernandina in honor of King Ferdinand Vigan was founded in 1574 by Spanish conquistador Juan de Salcedo as the capital of Ylocos Before Salcedo arrived in Bigan the town was the center of Malayan civilization with a population of 8 000 greater than that of Manila at the time It was already enjoying some prosperity trading with the Chinese and Japanese who brought fine jars silk and crockery through the nearby port of Pandan Caoayan In the 19th century Vigan traded with Europe Ships loaded with indigo went to textile mills on the Continent The invention of chemical dyes in Germany ruined this industry Affluent citizens of Vigan stocked their homes with statuettes of brass and iron dinner wares and other artifacts of European civilization including fine ivory inlaid furniture and China wares citation needed Social institutions Edit Before Salcedo died in 1576 be bequeathed his encomienda to a select group who continued the tenancy system which developed into the practice of caciquism landlordism and consequently usury The aristocracy of the babaknangs against whom the kaillanes rose in revolt in 1762 is apparent The two sections of the town one for the meztizos and the other for the naturales are still distinct These practices became prominent during the indigo boom at the middle of the 19th century Caciquism together with landlordism and usury was the greatest obstacle to the progress of the province Migration Edit The Spanish colonizers utilized free labor in the development of Ilocos Sur Resentment of free labor brought about sporadic revolts and those who refused to be slaves or tenants left the region and went to Abra and the Cagayan Valley From 1898 to the first decade of the 20th century covered ox carts moved to the rich plains of Pangasinan Nueva Ecija and Tarlac In these travels the children were told tales of Lam ang Angalo Aran Juan Sadot and other legendary Ilocano characters Folk songs like Pamulinawen Manang Biday Dungdungwen Kanto Unay Unay and the Iloko dal lot were popularized The second phase of Ilocano migration was from 1908 to 1946 when surplus labor migrated to the plantations of Hawaii and the American West Coast At the height of migration the population density of Ilocos Sur was 492 inhabitants per square mile which made it the most dense region in the Philippines excluding Manila The last group of labor migration to Hawaii was in 1946 when 7 365 men were recruited by the U S Department of Labor Vigan was the recruiting center More than seventy percent of the 63 500 Filipinos in Hawaii are of Ilocano origin citation needed Economic prosperity Edit The first half of the 19th century was an economic boom for Ilocos Sur It was during this period when the cotton tobacco and indigo industries were encouraged by the government With the operations of the Royal Company of the Philippines Real Compania de Filipinas the textile industry was developed on a large scale and the abolition of the tobacco monopoly accelerated economic progress The invention of chemical dyes put the indigo industry out of business Uneasy peace Edit The history of Ilocos Sur from the beginning of the Spanish rule to the first decade of the nineteenth century was characterized by revolts against tributes and forced labor as well as monopolies The most famous uprising was the Ilocos revolt 1762 1763 better known as Silang s Revolt This was principally an uprising aimed at the Babaknangs and the alcalde mayor of Vigan After Diego Silang s assassination on May 28 1763 his wife Maria Josefa Gabriela continued the fight until she was captured and hanged publicly on September 20 1763 The government s monopoly on basi the native wine occurred on September 16 1817 Under the command of Ambaristo the rebels were defeated by a contingent of regular troops and recruits On March 25 1898 Isabelo Abaya fomented an uprising in Candon and raised a red flag in the town plaza The historic Ikkis ti Candon was the start of several revolutions in the Ilocos Region further explanation needed Philippine Revolution and Philippine American War Edit Ilocos Sur like other provinces in the Philippines was quick to rally behind Gen Emilio Aguinaldo in the Philippine Revolution of 1896 Upon Vigan s capture the rebels made Bishop s Palace their headquarters On March 21 1898 Don Mariano Acosta of Candon established the provincial revolutionary government When General Aguinaldo returned from exile in Hong Kong he sent General Manuel Tinio to implement guerilla warfare on the Americans Vigan served as Tinio s headquarters until its occupation by the U S 45th Infantry Division under Lt Col James Parker on December 4 1899 General Gregorio del Pilar died a heroic death on December 2 1899 at the Tirad Pass in Concepcion in a battle against the American Forces under Major C March Further information Battle of Tirad Pass Under the Americans a civil government was established in Ilocos Sur on September 1 1901 Don Mena Crisologo a delegate to the Malolos Congress was the first provincial governor World War II Edit On December 10 1941 a contingent of Japanese Imperial forces landed in Mindoro Vigan Santa Pandan and Caoayan In Cervantes the Battle of Bessang Pass was fought between General Yamashita s forces and the U S 21st Infantry On April 18 1945 Ilocos Sur was liberated from the Japanese by the joint efforts of Ilocano guerrillas and American soldiers further explanation needed Contemporary history Edit The 1970s were a dark period for the province as armed men known as the saka saka Ilocano literally bare footed terrorized the province This reign of terror resulted in the famous burning of the barangays of Ora East and Ora Centro in Bantay The era ended with the election of Luis Chavit Singson as governor citation needed Geography Edit Coastline of Vigan Ilocos Sur occupies the central section of the Ilocos Region in northern Luzon It is bordered by Ilocos Norte to the north Abra to the northeast Mountain Province to the east Benguet to the southeast La Union to the south and the South China Sea to the west Its area of 2 596 00 square kilometres 1 002 32 sq mi 7 occupies about 20 of the total land area of Region 1 The topography of Ilocos Sur ranges from 10 to 1 700 metres 33 to 5 577 ft above sea level Climate Edit The climate is generally dry as defined by the Hernandez climate classification the dry months are from October to May The southernmost portion in Cervantes is wet with rain evenly distributed throughout the year while the southeastern part of Sugpon receives less precipitation The rainy season arrives in August while January and February have the lowest precipitation The mean temperature in the province is 27 C 81 F January is the coldest vague Administrative divisions Edit Ilocos Sur comprises 32 municipalities and 2 component cities which are organized into two legislative districts 7 There are a total of 768 barangays in the province 3 Political map of Ilocos Sur Provincial capital and component city Component city Municipality City or municipality District 7 Population p a Area 7 Density Barangay Coordinates A 2020 3 2015 8 km2 sq mi km2 sq miAlilem 2nd 1 0 6 695 6 640 0 16 119 33 46 07 56 150 9 16 53 13 N 120 31 48 E 16 8870 N 120 5299 E 16 8870 120 5299 Alilem Banayoyo 2nd 1 1 7 748 7 694 0 13 24 63 9 51 310 800 14 17 14 09 N 120 28 47 E 17 2358 N 120 4797 E 17 2358 120 4797 Banayoyo Bantay 1st 5 2 35 731 34 323 0 77 76 60 29 58 470 1 200 34 17 34 54 N 120 23 11 E 17 5818 N 120 3865 E 17 5818 120 3865 Bantay Burgos 2nd 1 8 12 224 11 679 0 87 44 38 17 14 280 730 26 17 18 58 N 120 30 33 E 17 3160 N 120 5093 E 17 3160 120 5093 Burgos Cabugao 1st 5 4 37 501 35 706 0 94 95 56 36 90 390 1 000 33 17 47 33 N 120 27 21 E 17 7926 N 120 4559 E 17 7926 120 4559 Cabugao Candon 2nd 8 8 60 623 57 884 0 88 103 28 39 88 590 1 500 42 17 11 22 N 120 26 51 E 17 1895 N 120 4474 E 17 1895 120 4474 Candon Caoayan 1st 2 9 19 861 18 551 1 31 17 42 6 73 1 100 2 800 17 17 32 52 N 120 23 00 E 17 5477 N 120 3833 E 17 5477 120 3833 Caoayan Cervantes 2nd 2 5 17 211 16 573 0 72 234 70 90 62 73 190 13 16 59 24 N 120 44 07 E 16 9899 N 120 7354 E 16 9899 120 7354 Cervantes Galimuyod 2nd 1 6 10 748 10 011 1 36 34 40 13 28 310 800 24 17 10 59 N 120 28 07 E 17 1830 N 120 4687 E 17 1830 120 4687 Galimuyod Gregorio del Pilar 2nd 0 7 4 875 4 219 2 79 41 66 16 09 120 310 7 17 08 53 N 120 36 39 E 17 1481 N 120 6109 E 17 1481 120 6109 Gregorio del Pilar Lidlidda 2nd 0 7 4 647 4 398 1 05 33 84 13 07 140 360 11 17 15 07 N 120 31 15 E 17 2519 N 120 5207 E 17 2519 120 5207 Lidlidda Magsingal 1st 4 5 30 792 28 302 1 62 84 98 32 81 360 930 30 17 41 06 N 120 25 33 E 17 6851 N 120 4257 E 17 6851 120 4257 Magsingal Nagbukel 2nd 0 8 5 259 4 938 1 21 43 12 16 65 120 310 12 17 26 48 N 120 31 34 E 17 4466 N 120 5260 E 17 4466 120 5260 Nagbukel Narvacan 2nd 6 4 44 006 42 803 0 53 122 21 47 19 360 930 34 17 25 10 N 120 28 37 E 17 4194 N 120 4769 E 17 4194 120 4769 Narvacan Quirino 2nd 1 2 8 573 8 535 0 08 240 10 92 70 36 93 9 17 08 12 N 120 40 35 E 17 1367 N 120 6765 E 17 1367 120 6765 Quirino Salcedo 2nd 1 6 11 288 10 935 0 61 103 44 39 94 110 280 21 17 09 03 N 120 32 10 E 17 1507 N 120 5361 E 17 1507 120 5361 Salcedo San Emilio 2nd 1 1 7 407 7 427 0 05 141 44 54 61 52 130 8 17 14 19 N 120 34 44 E 17 2386 N 120 5789 E 17 2386 120 5789 San Emilio San Esteban 2nd 1 2 8 349 8 072 0 64 19 62 7 58 430 1 100 10 17 19 47 N 120 26 42 E 17 3297 N 120 4451 E 17 3297 120 4451 San Esteban San Ildefonso 1st 1 1 7 787 7 075 1 84 11 35 4 38 690 1 800 15 17 37 30 N 120 23 35 E 17 6249 N 120 3931 E 17 6249 120 3931 San Ildefonso San Juan 1st 3 8 26 411 25 199 0 90 64 37 24 85 410 1 100 32 17 44 32 N 120 27 30 E 17 7422 N 120 4583 E 17 7422 120 4583 San Juan San Vicente 1st 1 8 12 758 11 720 1 63 12 60 4 86 1 000 2 600 7 17 35 39 N 120 22 22 E 17 5941 N 120 3729 E 17 5941 120 3729 San Vicente Santa 2nd 2 2 15 340 15 106 0 29 109 10 42 12 140 360 26 17 29 10 N 120 26 04 E 17 4860 N 120 4344 E 17 4860 120 4344 Santa Santa Catalina 1st 2 0 13 945 13 597 0 48 9 68 3 74 1 400 3 600 9 17 35 20 N 120 21 48 E 17 5888 N 120 3634 E 17 5888 120 3634 Santa Catalina Santa Cruz 2nd 5 8 39 868 37 911 0 96 88 78 34 28 450 1 200 49 17 05 04 N 120 27 07 E 17 0844 N 120 4520 E 17 0844 120 4520 Santa Cruz Santa Lucia 2nd 3 7 25 402 24 981 0 32 49 72 19 20 510 1 300 36 17 07 02 N 120 26 53 E 17 1173 N 120 4480 E 17 1173 120 4480 Santa Lucia Santa Maria 2nd 4 4 30 321 28 597 1 12 63 31 24 44 480 1 200 33 17 22 03 N 120 28 51 E 17 3676 N 120 4807 E 17 3676 120 4807 Santa Maria Santiago 2nd 2 7 18 759 17 958 0 83 46 36 17 90 400 1 000 24 17 17 38 N 120 26 43 E 17 2940 N 120 4453 E 17 2940 120 4453 Santiago Santo Domingo 1st 4 1 27 975 27 596 0 26 55 49 21 42 500 1 300 36 17 38 16 N 120 24 36 E 17 6378 N 120 4101 E 17 6378 120 4101 Santo Domingo Sigay 2nd 0 4 2 737 2 419 2 38 81 55 31 49 34 88 7 17 02 34 N 120 34 46 E 17 0429 N 120 5795 E 17 0429 120 5795 Sigay Sinait 1st 3 7 25 640 25 427 0 16 65 56 25 31 390 1 000 44 17 51 59 N 120 27 22 E 17 8664 N 120 4561 E 17 8664 120 4561 Sinait Sugpon 2nd 0 7 4 585 3 820 3 54 57 11 22 05 80 210 6 16 49 38 N 120 29 45 E 16 8272 N 120 4959 E 16 8272 120 4959 Sugpon Suyo 2nd 1 7 11 446 10 622 1 43 124 00 47 88 92 240 8 16 58 33 N 120 31 30 E 16 9758 N 120 5249 E 16 9758 120 5249 Suyo Tagudin 2nd 5 7 39 277 38 122 0 57 151 19 58 37 260 670 43 16 56 04 N 120 26 42 E 16 9345 N 120 4450 E 16 9345 120 4450 Tagudin Vigan 1st 7 8 53 879 49 747 1 53 25 12 9 70 2 100 5 400 39 17 34 22 N 120 23 12 E 17 5729 N 120 3867 E 17 5729 120 3867 Vigan Total 689 668 658 587 0 88 2 596 00 1 002 32 270 700 768 see GeoGroup box Coordinates mark the city town center and are sortable by latitude Barangays Edit The 32 municipalities and 2 cities of the province comprise a total of 768 barangays with Puro in Magsingal as the most populous in 2010 and Montero in Banayoyo as the least 9 Further information List of barangays in Ilocos SurDemographics EditPopulation census of Ilocos SurYearPop p a 1903189 572 1918247 458 1 79 1939271 532 0 44 1948276 278 0 19 1960338 058 1 70 1970385 139 1 31 1975419 776 1 74 1980443 591 1 11 1990519 966 1 60 1995545 385 0 90 2000594 206 1 85 2007633 138 0 88 2010658 587 1 44 2015689 668 0 88 2020706 009 0 46 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 8 9 9 10 According to the 2020 census it has a population of 706 009 people 3 with a density of 270 inhabitants per square kilometre or 700 inhabitants per square mile The 1960 census lists 338 058 people 64 446 dwelling units of which 2 974 are lighted with electricity 3227 provided with radio 7379 served with pipe water 25 137 served with artesian and pumped water and 310 using electricity kerosene and gas for cooking citation needed Inhabitants Edit Ilocos Sur is inhabited mostly by Ilocanos belonging to the third largest ethnic group of Austronesian origin A Spanish chronicler who wrote that the people are very simple domestic and peaceful large of body and very strong They are highly civilized They are a most clean race especially the women in their homes which they keep very neat and clean citation needed Miguel de Loarca records around 1582 that the Ilocanos are intelligent as the Zambalenos for they are farmers The main occupation of the people is agriculture citation needed Father Juan de Medina noted in 1630 that the natives are the humblest and most tractable known and lived in nest and large settlements citation needed Religion Edit The province is predominantly Roman Catholic with 75 of population adherence Aglipayan Church is also a considerable large minority with a 20 adherence citation needed Other religious beliefs are represented by other Christian Churches such as Baptist Iglesia ni Cristo Methodist Seventh day Adventist other Evangelical Christians as well as Muslims Economy EditPoverty Incidence of Ilocos Sur Source Philippine Statistics Authority 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Sinait Public Market This section is missing information about economic indicators e g per capita income unemployment etc Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page October 2021 Products and industries Edit The people are engaged in farming producing food crops mostly rice corn vegetable root crops and fruits Non food crops include tobacco cotton and tigergrass Cottage industries include loom weaving furniture making jewelry making ceramics blacksmithing and food processing Agriculture Edit Rice grains being dried on a road in San Esteban Ilocos Sur s economy is agrarian but its 2 647 square kilometres 1 022 sq mi of unfertile land is not enough to support a population of 338 579 citation needed Agricultural crops such as rice corn tobacco and fruit trees dominate their farm industries Secondary crops are camote and cassava sugar cane and onions The rapidly growing population the decreasing fertility of the soil and the long period between the planting and harvesting season have forced the people to turn to manufacture and trade Many Ilocanos go to the Cagayan valley Central Plains and Mindanao to sell Ilocano woven cloth Virginia leaf tobacco is still a premier cash crop after a windfall brought about by the Tobacco Subsidy Law authored by Congressman Floro Crisologo in 1964 18 and later enhanced by the Republic Act No 7171 authored by Congressman Singson 19 Weaving is the most extensive handicraft once bolstered by the installation of the NDC Textile Mills in Narvacan which supplied the weavers with yarn Other industries are burnay and slipper making in Vigan furniture cabinet and statue making in San Vicente mortar and pestle making in San Esteban and bolo making in Santa Infrastructure EditElectricity Edit Education EditIlocos Sur has 547 public schools including five general high schools one university one agricultural college and 56 private schools 16 of which are Catholic citation needed Culture EditThe Ilocos Sur Museum founded on August 22 1970 has a collection of cultural treasures which include art include paintings centuries old sculptures pieces of carved furniture and relics of Spanish European and Chinese cultures that had influenced Ilocano life for centuries Chapters of Philippine history and religion are found in the Crisologo collections which includes family heirlooms centuries old santos religious statuettes made of wood or ivory clarification needed other ivory images Vienna furniture marble topped tables ancient carved beds rare Chinese porcelains jars and jarlettes lamps Muslim brass wares and Spanish and Mexican coins The Syquia collections including then President Elpidio Quirino s memorabilia vie in quality with the Crisologo collections But in the midst of a fire scare in Vigan in the late 1908s and 1990s the relics in the Syquia Mansion were transferred to Manila for safekeeping UNESCO Recognitions in Ilocos Sur EditUNESCO has inscribed two Ilocos Sur sites in the World Heritage List Heritage City of Vigan Edit In 1999 the Heritage City of Vigan was inscribed in the World Heritage List UNESCO describes the site as Established in the 16th century Vigan is the best preserved example of a planned Spanish colonial town in Asia Its architecture reflects the coming together of cultural elements from elsewhere in the Philippines from China and from Europe resulting in a culture and townscape that have no parallel anywhere in East and South East Asia 20 Santa Maria Church Edit In 1993 the Baroque Churches of the Philippines containing 4 properties was inscribed in the World Heritage List One of the properties was the Santa Maria Church of Ilocos Sur UNESCO describes the unique architectural style of the churches is a reinterpretation of European Baroque by Chinese and Philippine craftsmen 21 Notable people from Ilocos Sur EditJose Burgos priest and one of the martyrs of Gomburza Gabriela Silang revolutionary leader best known as the first female leader of a Filipino movement for independence from Spain Isabelo de los Reyes prominent Filipino patriot politician writer and labor activist He was the original founder of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente an independent Philippine nationalist church He is known as the Father of Philippine Folklore the Father of the Philippine Labor Movement 22 and the Father of Filipino Socialism 23 Elpidio Quirino 6th President of the Philippines 2nd Vice President of the Philippines William Dar 45th Secretary of Agriculture and horticulturist Sixto Brillantes 21st chairman of Commission on Elections Marcelino Crisologo Filipino politician poet writer and playwright Jose Ping ay Filipino Politician and Founder of Ilocos Sur Cooperative Bank Abraham Sarmiento 119th Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Alan Purisima 17th Chief of the Philippine National Police Alfredo Verzosa Filipino Catholic Bishop and is venerated as a Servant of God in the Catholic Church Leopoldo Jaucian Filipino Catholic Bishop Pedro Bucaneg poet and the Father of Ilocano literature Leona Florentino poet in the Spanish and Ilocano languages and the mother of Philippine women s literature Leon C Pichay writer and poet King of Ilocano Poets during the 50s Jose L de Ocampo Filipino architect and artist Nestor Redondo Filipino comics artist Virgilio Redondo Filipino comics artist Philip Vera Cruz Filipino American labor leader farmworker and leader in the Asian American movement Jose Maria Sison Founding Chairman of the Communist Party of the PhilippinesReferences Edit List of Provinces PSGC Interactive Makati City Philippines National Statistical Coordination Board Archived from the original on January 11 2013 Retrieved September 19 2013 Mount Camingingel PeakVisor Retrieved June 8 2021 a b c d Census of Population 2020 Region I Ilocos Region Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved July 8 2021 Gender and Special Population Groups Provincial Human Development Index Philippine Statistics Authority Archived from the original on June 17 2020 Retrieved January 12 2021 Purchase and Delivery of Materials for the Construction of New Steel Bleachers and Repair of Existing Steel Bleachers Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved July 7 2010 Purchase and Delivery of a Delivery van for the Botika ti Probinsya ti Ilocos Sur Office Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved July 7 2010 a b c d Province Ilocos Sur PSGC Interactive Quezon City Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved January 8 2016 a b Census of Population 2015 Region I Ilocos Region Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved June 20 2016 a b c Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region I Ilocos Region Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 Philippines Census Of Population of all LGUs 1903 2007 archive org Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved February 14 2017 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 https psa gov ph sites default files NSCB LocalPovertyPhilippines 0 pdf publication date 29 November 2005 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2009 20Poverty 20Statistics pdf publication date 8 February 2011 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Updated 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 20with 20Measures 20of 20Precision 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 2015 20and 202018 xlsx publication date 4 June 2020 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority Republic Act No 4155 lawphil net Republic Act No 7171 REPUBLIC ACTS PHILIPPINE LAWS STATUTES and CODES laws chanrobles com Centre UNESCO World Heritage Historic City of Vigan UNESCO World Heritage Centre Centre UNESCO World Heritage Baroque Churches of the Philippines UNESCO World Heritage Centre Bragado Erlinda 2002 Sukimatem Isabelo de los Reyes Revisited PDF Philippine Studies 50 1 50 75 Retrieved February 20 2019 Saulo Alfredo 2002 Communism in the Philippines An Introduction Enlarged ed Manila Philippines Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 9715504035 OCLC 969406494 External links EditMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML Media related to Ilocos Sur at Wikimedia Commons Geographic data related to Ilocos Sur at OpenStreetMap Philippine Standard Geographic Code Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ilocos Sur amp oldid 1146496553, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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